Leedsbusdriver
Every breath leaves me one less to my last
- Location
- West Yorkshire
Have you tried this app @srw https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ryanlothian.sheetmusic
Oh yes, so they do. And dockable and rechargeable is nice - but the price is broadly in line with that of the MS hardware. I'll need to do a side-by-side comparison.They do have a stylus:
http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/thinkpad/x-series/x1-yoga/
Very nice machines, given that a 2 in 1 is what you need/want. And it's a Thinkpad, not merely a Lenovo device. i.e. it's professional quality.
Useful, thanks.Have you tried this app @srw https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ryanlothian.sheetmusic
The PC World near the office has an MS Surface Book, which when I went in today was actually powered up and had its pen attached. It's gorgeous. The pen is very intuitive and very responsive, and makes taking notes on other people's documents a breeze.
As for sheet music playing, I reckon I could get two portrait A4 pages side-by-side and play quite comfortably from them. And, of course, having a pen makes it easy to annotate and add the usual sort of musician's or page-turner's marks you need in real life. Sibelius also claims to be able to do handwriting recognition for music - making writing music a piece of cake.
@Old jon - do you use any specific Acrobat viewer? The one on the machine in the shop was almost perfect, except for one thing. The holy grail for any keyboard player would be to be able to choose when to page turn - which means being able to flick one page on at a time. I could work out how to set up to display two pages and go from 1&2 to 3&4 and so on, but not to be able to go from 1&2 to 2&3 to 3&4 and so on.
Thanks, but no thanks. An Android tab won't run the music composition software I'm interested in. If I wanted a large-scale tablet I gather Apple do one....I am currently typing this reply on my Pixel C tablet using Google handwriting input and it works well. Yes It's an expensive tablet @srw but may be one to look at?
The Lenovo is much better value, and has a slightly bigger, but worse proportioned and less hi-res screen. If I had a prayer of persuading our corporate IT department to offer it as an option I would - but it's far too expensive for them. This is going to sound completely incomprehensible to many, but it looks so much like the work Thinkpad laptops I've been using for the last 10 years (even down to the little nubby red trackbobble thingy - which I like using much more than a trackpad) that I'm rather put off.Oh yes, so they do. And dockable and rechargeable is nice - but the price is broadly in line with that of the MS hardware. I'll need to do a side-by-side comparison.
But if a technology guru is a fan of the Surface range I'm pretty much sold. Now all I need to do is ask my accountant to see if she can come up with a wheeze to work out how much of it I'm using for freelance work purposes and so how much of it can be offset as an aggressive tax avoidance strategy. Not much, I suspect.Typing this on a Surface Pro 4. Wonderful bit of kit but funny Microsoft couldn't come up with a power lead that does not keep falling out. STRONGER MAGNETS PLEASE.
Have a Surface Book waiting at home for me to power it up and configure it. Another wonderful bit of kit.
Used in conjunction with an MS Lumia 950XL phone. Nearly seemless. And Continuum is genius but needs too many cables.
(Oh, and yes, I have changed the thread title. It began sounding faintly perverted to me.)
Only 10.8" screen! I'm after something bigger - middle-aged eyesight, you understand.It might be worth looking at the Dell Venue 11 Pro - there's an option for a detachable keyboard that can dock to the tablet. I've just picked one up second hand off Fleabay, so I'll let you know what I think of it when (if?) it arrives... There are also Asus Transformer models that come with Windows, T100TAF for one, that'll be much cheaper than a Surface Pro (but probably not as good build quality though).
Now I'm intrigued: just what did I miss... ?
The better sort of technical architects that I'm working with have all gone BYOD and are using Surface Pro 3 and 4. The BYOD option here comes at a hefty price of inconvenience, as it isn't properly thought through, but we all feel the Surface experience more than makes up for that.The Lenovo is much better value, and has a slightly bigger, but worse proportioned and less hi-res screen. If I had a prayer of persuading our corporate IT department to offer it as an option I would - but it's far too expensive for them. This is going to sound completely incomprehensible to many, but it looks so much like the work Thinkpad laptops I've been using for the last 10 years (even down to the little nubby red trackbobble thingy - which I like using much more than a trackpad) that I'm rather put off.
But if a technology guru is a fan of the Surface range I'm pretty much sold. Now all I need to do is ask my accountant to see if she can come up with a wheeze to work out how much of it I'm using for freelance work purposes and so how much of it can be offset as an aggressive tax avoidance strategy. Not much, I suspect.